Monday, June 22, 2009

Links 72

this month:

* The Holocaust History Project
http://www.holocaust-history.org
The Holocaust History Project was formed in 1997 both to respond to the fraudulent claims of Holocaust-deniers and to document that period of history. The site provides an email question-and-answer service, for all questions relating to the Holocaust, at questions@holocaust-history.org

* Holocaust publications reviews and discussion group
http://www.h-net.msu.edu/~holoweb/
This site is a must visit. "H-Holocaust exists so scholars of the Holocaust can communicate with each other using this innovative and exciting new technology, and makes available diverse bibliographical, research, and teaching aids."

* Human Rights USA
http://www.hrusa.org/
The HUMAN RIGHTS USA web site is being used to Educate, Communicate, Advocate, and Commemorate for human rights. On the site one may share human rights classroom lessons and activities, gather resources from the extensive bibliography listing, and use the interactive web forums to communicate with people working on human rights around the world. Many ideas and tools for advocating and protecting human rights are available, including a list of community action ideas. Visitors to the site can write to Congress directly using our web tools.

* Bulgarian Rescuer Dimitar Peshev
http://space.tin.it/associazioni/gnissim/peshev.htm
A new Web site dedicated to Bulgarian Rescuer Dimitar Peshev.

* Resources for Children of Holocaust Survivors
http://www.idot.aol.com/judy/Causes/cosh.htm
This extensive resource is for Children of Survivors, with numerous links and excellent references. "It is not about the legacy; it is about living with the legacy."

* International Association of Lesbian and Gay Children of Holocaust Survivors
http://infotrue.com
I started two websites for second generation groups. One is a small site for a town which had 2,000 Jews in 1932 and has about 50 members now. The other group which started 8 years ago and has several hundred members in nine countries, is launched through the same URL (infotrue.com).

* The Holocaust Journey
http://www.webcom.com/penina/holocst1.html
In 1985, a small group of Jews and Germans (7 adults and 4 children) traveled together in Germany and Poland to the sites of the Holocaust. I was a member of that group.

The experiences and feelings were so profound, it took me 10 years to begin writing about them. This "Journal" is a work in progress, expanding as I am able.

* Shoah-Projekt
http://homepages.muenchen.org/bm374879/holocaust
DEUTSCH: On our site Shoah Project we provide, besides a huge range of commented links, information about the concentration camp in Dachau, about the Resistance group "The White Rose" and others,

* Nuremberg War Crimes Trials
http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/imt/imt.htm
One of our most important projects is mounting the full proceedings of the Trial of the Major German War Criminals. We have so far mounted volumes 1-4 as well as numerous supporting documents.

* The Genocide Research Project
http://www.people.memphis.edu/~genocide
My colleagues and I have set up a web site called "Genocide: Resources for Teaching and Research." Among the features of the site is an annotated list of genocide related web pages, and one area of that section provides links to on-line bibliographies.

* Exhibition: On the Persecution of Jehovah's Witnesses
http://www.jwnet.org/jwstandfirm/

* Poems of Jewish Death
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/2730

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